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ORNL-2599.txt
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S A e -
B
-
ORNL-2599
C-85 — Reactors-Aircraft Nuclear
AEC RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT REPORT Propulsion Systems 7as
I
3 445k 0251081 5
M-3679 (22nd ed.)
L
AIRCRAFT NUCLEAR PROPULSION PROJECT
SEMIANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT
A
FOR PERIOD ENDING SEP TEMBER 30, 1958 : &é
REpT Feetrrn
CATION Crance: ' R R
AEC 9-g-¢ < 7g
OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY
operated by
UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION
for the
U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
LEGAL NOTICE
This report was prepared as an account of Government sponsored work. Neither the United States,
nor the Commission, nor any person acting on behalf of the Commission:
A. Mokes any warranty or representation, express or implied, with respect to the accuracy,
ion contained in this report, or that the use of
fringe
completeness, or usefulness of the informat
any information, apperatus, method, or process disclosed in this report may not
privately owned rights; or
B. Assumes cny licbilities with
any information, apparatus, method, or process disclosed in this report.
As used in the above, *‘person octing on behalf of the Commission® includes any employee or
or contractor prepares, handl
utes, or provides access to, any information pursuant to his employment or controct
spect to the use of, or for damages resulting from the use of
contractor of the Commission to the extent that such employe
or dis
with the Commission.
ORNL-2599
C-85 —~ Reactors-Aircraft Nuclear
Propulsion Systems
M-3679 (22nd ed.)
This document cansists of 232 pages.
Copy ?/ of 234 copies. Series A,
Contract No. W-7405-eng-26
AIRCRAFT NUCLEAR PROPULSION PROJECT
SEMIANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT
For Period Ending September 30, 1958
A. J. Miller, Project Coordinator
DATE ISSUED
JAN 22 1359
OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY
Oak Ridge, Tennessee
operated by
UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION
for the
U. S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
MARTIN MARIETTA ENERGY SYSTEMS LIBRA
- i
3 445& 0251081 5
FOREWORD
The ORNL-ANP program primarily provides research and development support in
shielding, reactor materials, and reactor engineering to organizations engaged in the
development of air-cooled and liquid-metal-cooled reactors for aircraft propulsion. Most
of the work described here is basic to or in direct support of investigations under way
at General Electric Company, Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Department, and Pratt &
Whitney Aircraft Division, United Aircraft Corporation. This report is divided into rour
major parts: 1. Metallurgy, 2. Chemistry and Radiation Damage, 3. Engineering, and
4, Shielding.
'
ANP PROJECT SEMIANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT
SUMMARY
PART 1. METALLURGY
1.1. Fabrication
Studies of the effect of heat treatment on the
mechanical properties at room temperature of arc-
" cast columbium prepared by the electron-beam
melting technique have indicated that specimens
heated at intermediate temperatures in the range
700 to 1000°C are more ductile than those heated
at the extremes of the range of treatment tempera-
tures. There is evidence, however, that the in-
creased ductility resulting from intermediate tem-
perature anneals of welds would not be retained at
higher temperatures and that stabilizing elements
will be required to neutralize the effects of inter-
stitial elements,
Electron-beam-melted columbium billets were
found to extrude readily if they were protected from
atmospheric contamination during heating, Arc-
melted material was found to be more difficult to
extrude, possibly because of a higher impurity
content,
Cracks found in drawn duplex and unclad colum-
bium tubing have indicated insufficient annealing
before tube reduction, and therefore a high-tempera-
ture, high-vacuum annealing furnace was designed
and is being built,
Since it appears that the production of satis-
factory columbium bodies will require either high-
purity metal or special alloys, purification and
alloying investigations are under way. Resistance
heating of columbium wire in vacuum at tempera-
tures up to its melting point has shown significant
reductions in nitrogen and oxygen content. Melting
stock has been obtained from which special alloys
will be prepared. Beryllium, zirconium, and cerium
will be used to neutralize residual oxygen. High-
purity columbium specimens contaminated with
known quantities of oxygen or nitrogen are being
prepared for corrosion testing in lithium,
Methods for obtaining highly pure yttrium metal
and hydrogen are being studied in order to de-
termine the effects of impurities on the hydriding
of yttrium. It is hoped that purification will alle-
viate the tendency of yttrium metal to crack during
hydriding and during thermal cycling of the hydrided
metal, The electron-beam melting process was
shown to be useful for removing fluorides and
traces of magnesium from yttrium metal, but it was
ineffective in removing traces of oxygen or nitrogen
or farge quantities of magnesium. Equipment for
the production of yttrium metal from YF 5 has been
expanded to pilot-plant scale,
1.2. Corrosion
Studies of the various methods of purifying lithium
of oxygen and nitrogen have continved. As part of
these investigations, samples were taken of the
lithium shipments received from vendors and ana-
lyzed for oxygen by several methods in order to
compare various analytical techniques. The analy-
ses showed that it will probably be necessary to
purify all lithium received.
Experiments are being conducted to determine
the solubility of lithium nitride and lithium oxide in
tithium, An average value of approximately 1300
pPpm oxygen was obtained recently that is consider-
ably lower than the value obtained previously.
The ability of yttrium to getter impurities from
lithium is being investigated. Hardness increases
and vacuum-fusion analysis results indicate that
yttrium getters both oxygen and nitrogen from
lithium, but no reductions in the oxygen or nitrogen
contents of the lithium bath have been found.
Static tests of several grades of arc-cast colum-
bium tubing have been conducted. Preliminary
results indicate that surface contamination and
subsequent diffusion of the impurities into the
cofumbium during annealing may account for some
of the previously observed attack of columbium by
lithium,
Two joining techniques for columbium, braze
welding and fusion welding, and three types of
gaseous environment were investigated to determine
their effects on the hardness of columbium and its
corrosion resistance to lithium. A marked reduc-
tion in depth and severity of attack was noted as
the purity of the gaseous welding environment was
improved. Appreciable decreases in the hardness
of the as-welded columbium specimens as a result
of exposure to lithium again indicated gettering of
oxygen from the columbium by the lithium.
A series of seesaw-furnace tests of molybdenum
in contact with lithium was conducted. The results
indicate, in general, that molybdenum has excellent
resistance to attack and mass transfer at hot-zone
temperatures as high as 1900°F, Dissimilar-metal
mass transfer of Inconel to the molybdenum was
observed in the Inconel-sodium-molybdenum section
of the test capsule. No molybdenum failures either
in the base material or in weld zones have been
encountered in the tests conducted thus far,
Similar seesaw-furnace tests of columbium-lithium
systems have been initiated. In the one test (hot
zone, 1600°F; cold zone, 1100°F; test duration,
300 hr) completed to date, columbium exhibited
excellent resistance to attack and mass transfer,
Static corrosion tests of beryllium specimens in
lithium in iron capsules and in beryllium capsules
at 1500 and at 1830°F showed beryllium to be
quite resistant to attack by static lithium in an
all-beryltium system. It was very heavily attacked,
however, when tested in the iron container,
Refractory-metal-base brazing alloys are being
corrosion tested in high-temperature lithium, since
commercially available brazing alloys have very
limited corrosion resistance to lithium,
A method was developed (under subcontract at
NDA) for measuring the rates at which container
metals dissolve in liquid lithium, The solution rate
measurements confirmed the deleterious effects of
nitrogen and oxygen and the beneficial effect of
aluminum on mass transfer in lithium as noted in
thermal-convection loop tests.
1.3. Welding and Brazing
A survey of phase diagrams of refractory-metal-
base binary systems has revealed several promising
brazing alloys. Vacuum-brazing equipment has
been constructed for studying these systems, and
flowability and corrosion tests are under way.
Studies of the diffusion of the brazing alloy into
columbium are also being initiated. If diffusion or
alloying occurs it may increase the remelt tempera-
ture of the brazing alloy and thus increase the
maximum service temperature,
A small,glass dry box containing a stationary
torch and a movable table was assembled for
welding studies on columbium and molybdenum.
This equipment will be used in investigating the
weldability of these materials under highly con-
trolled degrees of atmospheric purity. Several butt
welds made on arc-cast columbium sheet in a puri-
fied argon atmosphere were found to be ductile,
vi
1.4. Mechanical Properties
Equipment has been developed for tensile and
creep tests of materials in controlled environments
at temperatures up to 2500°F. Several successful
tests have been completed on molybdenum at
2000°F.
Creep and rupture properties of Inconel have been
investigated in tubes with both internal pressure
and axial stress, The creep data obtained compare
favorably with the theoretical curves derived from
Soderberg’s analysis and the von Mises and Tresca
flow rules. Fracture cannot be predicted by the
maximum principal stress criterion,
Dynamic load tests have been conducted on
Inconel rods and tubes that were programed on the
basis of plastic strain rather than stress. A simple
relationship, in the form N = K, exists between
the number of cycles to failure and the plastic
strain absorbed in each cycle, The constants a
and K are found to vary as a function of the ma-
terial and test conditions. On the other hand,
geometry, temperature variations in the range 1300
to 1600°F, and small variations in chemical compo-
sition do not significantly alter the cycle life of a
material, Strains induced thermally show excellent
correlation on the basis of equivalent amounts of
plastic strain per cycle with mechanically induced
strains in temperature ranges where the material is
metallurgically stable. The frequency at which the
material is strained is observed to infiuence the
number of cycles that can be survived. The slow
frequencies, particularly at low amplitudes, appear
to produce the most deleterious results.
1.5. Ceramics
Small batches of zirconium boride were synthe-
sized for incorporation into BeO bodies. The ma-
terial prepared by an improved process was found
to be >97% pure. Several additives were tested as
means for increasing the density of BeO. Of the
various combinations tested, it was found that a
body with 94 wt % BeQ, 5 wt % MgO, and 1 wt %
B4C had the greatest density.
Screening tests were run to determine the oxida-
tion resistance of TaB,, TiB,, CrB2, HfBz, BN,
and ZrB, when added to high-density BeO. The
ZrBz-BeO and HfBz-BeO combinations were found
to be superior to the other mixtures. Attempts to
fabricate large hot-pressed blocks of the ZrB,-BeO
mixture for which a commercial grade of ZrB_ was
used revealed the need for pure ZrB.,. The commer-
cial grade of ZrB2 was found to contain about 10%
Fe. Uniform blocks were obtained when pure ZrB,
was used,
1.6, Nondestructive Testing
Studies of the use of x-ray sensitive Vidicon in a
closed-circuit television system for remote viewing
of x-ray images were continued. It was found that
the sensitivity of the selenium photoconductor to
x-rays could be improved by admitting visible light
to the photoconductor surface, Contrast sensitivity
was increased by as much as a factor of 3. Thick-
ness changes of about 2,5% were detected in E}B-in.-
thick aluminum,
Investigations are being made of the applicability
of existing ultrasonic techniques to the inspection
of duplex tubing, It appears that the resonance
ultrasonic technique can be developed as a means
for evaluating the quality of the bond between the
materials,
1.7. Metallography
A 20-tube semicircular heat exchanger fabricated
of Inconel in which a fused salt flowing around the
tubes exchanged heat to NaK flowing in the tubes
was examined metallographically to determine the
location and effects of the leak that caused termi-
nation of operation. The heat exchanger, which
had operated 1139 hr at 1200°F and above, had
experienced 194 thermal cycles between isothermal
operation at 1200°F and operation at design condi-
tions (fused salt inlet and outlet temperatures of
1600 and 1250°F and NaK inlet and outlet tempera-
tures of 1070 and 1500°F.)
The leak of NaK to fused salt was found to have
been the result of fracture of three tubes in the
high-temperature header area. The cracks were
radial and propagated from the tension side of the
tubes; they were in the tubes with the shortest
tube bend-to-tube sheet length (]'/8 to 3/4in.). The
maximum depth of corrosion attack on the fused-
salt side of the tubes was 0,006 in., and, on the
NaK side, it was 0.002 in.
PART 2. CHEMISTRY AND RADIATION DAMAGE
2.1. Materials Chemistry
Sufficient fluoride mixture for the first charge
of the equipment in the yttrium-metal pilot plant was
prepared. The YF, needed was prepared by direct
fluorination of dry Y,0,. A mean conversion
efficiency of 99% and suitably low oxygen contents
were obtained. Magnesium fluoride for the process
was prepared by dry hydrofluorination of MgO; the
mean conversion efficiency was 97.7%.
Sufficient information with which to construct a
portion of the phase diagram of the LiF-YF3 system
was obtained, A single eutectic occurs in the
system at 19 mole % YF,; mp, 682°C.,
Further experimental information was obtained
regarding a tentative procedure for purifying lithium
metal by extracting oxide, nitride, and carbide
impurities with a eutectic mixture of lithium halide
salts. The second extraction of each series of
extractions showed considerable reduction in the
concentration of impurities.
2.2, Analytical Chemistry
The method for the determination of oxygen in
fluoride salts by fluorination with KBrF , was
successfully applied, The coefficient of variation
of the method, as based on duplicate analyses of
seven samples, was 6% in measurements of the
salt LiF-Mng-YFB. The recovery of oxygen added
as MgO and Y203 exceeded 98%, with a precision
of 2%.
A rapid method was adapted for the determination
of magnesium and yttrium in LiF-Mng-YF3 by
titration with a standard solution of ethylene-
diaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). Amalgamated
gold serves as the indicator electrode. Both ele-
ments are titrated in the same solution by adjust-
ment of the pH of the solution. No interferences
were encountered in the application of the method
to LiF-MgF ,-YF,. The precision of the method is
about 1%.
2,3. Radiation Damage
Experimental apparatus is being prepared with
which to test the stability of yttrium hydride and
beryllium oxide thermally cycled at high tempera-
tures in a high gamma-ray heating region of the
Engineering Test Reactor. Mockup tests have
been run on the heat removal system and on the
thermocouple design. The heat removal system
will provide a temperature control method in that
it will be possible to vary the heat conductivity of
the cooling gas by varying the concentration of
argon and helium in the gas mixture. Stainless steel
was selected as the test capsule material as a re-
sult of compatibility tests. Examinations and meas-
urements of the samples will be made before irradi-
ation and repeated after irradiation.
Stress-rupture experiments in air on tube-burst
specimens of Inconel were completed in the MTR.
vii
Preparations are being made for similar tube-burst
tests and creep tests in the fast flux of the ORR,
In conjunction with studies of the effects of
radiation on semiconductor barriers, a cryostat was
constructed that has a temperature range of —200°C
to +350°C, Requirements, other than the tempera-
ture range, were long term reliability and “‘fail
_safe’’ operation. A cooling water failure or an
electrical failure will shut the cryostat down with-
out harmful effects to any of the system components,
Temperatures in the sample chamber can be main-
tained to within ]/4°C, with a gradient along the
length of the copper section of the sample chamber
of ]/4°C.
A grown-junction silicon diode has been irradiated
in a fast-neutron flux facility in the ORNL Graphite
Reactor to an integrated dosage of 1.8 x 101>
neutrons/cm?. Changes in forward and reverse
current at l-volt bias were recorded. A change in
reverse current on the order of a factor of 100 in-
crease was observed that is to be compared with an
increase of 200% for a comparable irradiation of an
alloy-junction diode and an increase of 30% in a
point-contact diode.
Attempts were made to alloy indium and germanium
at low temperatures, and crystal growths were pro-
duced that had not been noted before. Penetration
of indium into the germanium conformed to precise
geometric configurations, and it is thought that
such penetration may be indicative of the early
steps of the alloying process.
PART 3. ENGINEERING
3.1, Component Development and Testing
The oil-lubricated pump rotary element that is
being operated in a gamma-radiation field in the
MTR canal will have accumulated a total dosage
of 1 x 10'? by September 30. Operation of the seal
continues to be comparable to that of a seal
operated without irradiation for a similar period of
time. Analyses of the bulk and leakage oil have
indicated little change.
A Fulton-Sylphon seal on a sump-type centrifugal
pump that is circulating NaK at 1200°F, 1200 rpm,
and 1200 gpm has operated satisfactorily during
more than 7200 hr. A similar pump that had oper-
ated in the cavitation region with NaK as the
pumped fluid for 1096 hr was stopped because of
a drain valve leak. No damage was evident upon
disassembly of the pump, The data are being
viii
analyzed. A similar pump that is operating with a
fused salt has logged over 10,300 hr of operation. -
A third thin-shell mode| that was tested under
high-temperature thermal cycling conditions is
being disassembled for examination. A test loop
failure caused termination of the test after 602
thermal cycles; that is, 302 more than the scheduled
300 thermal cycles.
3.2. Heat Transfer Studies
Experimental studies of the effect of thermal-
stress cycling on structural materials were con-
tinued with the pulse-pump system, The dependence
of surface failure (cracking of Inconel) on cyclic
frequency was investigated in tests at 0.1, 0.4, and
1.0 cps. Maximum damage occurred at 0.1 cps,
with cracks as deep as 0.207 in. being observed.
At the highest frequency, no cracks were found at
the end of a 100-hr (360,000 cycles) exposure. An
attempt was made to correlate the results with
mechanical fatigue data, and, in general, it appears
that, for a given strain, failure occurs earlier (fewer
cycles) with surface thermal cycling than with
mechanical cycling. v
Analyses of data obtained from a mercury system
in the study of heat transfer in a liquid metal with
internal heat generation were completed. On the
average, the data indicate surface-to-fluid mean
temperature differences 49% higher than those
predicted by the analogy. Since the experiment was
designed so that gaseous films or scale at the wall
could not influence the experimental results, it is
concluded that the diffusivity ratio is less than
unity for mercury.
Studies of heat transfer between a heated tube
surface and air in high-velocity vortex motion were
continued. Data with both forced- and free-vortex
flow indicate values of the heat-transfer coefficient
significantly above those obtained with linear flow
and equal flow power dissipation in identical
geometries.
3.3. Instrumentation and Controls
An initial check of the data acquisition system
purchased from the G. M. Giannini Company was
made and minor troubles and design inadequacies
were noted, The system is being modified and -
should be back in operation soon.
Life tests of three level probes operating in NaK
were continued. Similar tests in sodium were
initiated. Overrange tests designed to accelerate
-
the effects of aging on pressure transmitters were
continued. Slight bulging of the Inconel bodies
was observed after 5100 hr at 1400°F.
Life tests of a series of Inconel-sheathed thermo-
couples exposed to a fused salt were terminated
after about 11,000 hr at 1500°F. The thermocouples
were performing well when the test was stopped,
but the errors were increasing. Similar thermo-
couples have been under test in a sodium environ-
ment for about 16,000 hr. Many of these thermo-
couples now show considerable error.
Studies of the fundamental behavior of thermo-
couples in the range 300 to 1100°C are under way
under subcontract at the University of Tennessee.
Work on the improvement of the Oracle program for
thermocouple-data handling is nearing completion,
3.4, Applied Mechanics
Basic studies are under way of the elastic be-
havior of five structural configurations commonly
used in reactor design. The configurations being
analyzed are a flat circular plate, a tapered circular
plate, a cylindrical shell, a conical shell, and a
spherical shell. The stress and displacement
formulas and tables of numerical values for all the
functions involved are being obtained. The study
of the conical shetl, which has been completed,
provides for analyses of a conical shell with a
combination of axisymmetrical loads. The loads
may include membrane forces and uniform pressure,
in addition to edge moments and shear forces.
3.5. Advanced Power Plant Design
As part of a program for examining the feasi-
bility of the vortex reactor concept, experimental
studies were made of the vortex strengths ob-
tainable in a gas under a variety of conditions.
A survey was made of various types of auxiliary
power units suitable for use in satellites, A pre-
liminary evaluation was made of reactor cycles
employing either aluminum chloride or rubidium
vapor as the heat transfer medium.
PART 4. SHIELDING
4.1, Shielding Theory
A calculation was performed to obtain predicted
pulse-height spectra of capture and inelastic-
scattering gamma rays which could be compared
with the experimental spectra obtained in an ex-
periment at the Tower Shielding Facility. While
experimental cross sections were available for the
calculation of the nitrogen capture gamma-ray
spectrum, many of the cross sections used to pre-
dict the spectrum of inelastic-scattering gamma
rays were theoretical, In spite of this, the shapes
of the calculated and experimental pulse-height
spectra were in agreement,
It has previously been reported that an Oracle
Monte Carlo calculation of the penetration of mono-
energetic, monodirectional gamma rays in a lead
and water shield has included a total of 512 prob-
lems. Some typical plots of the heating results
from these calculations are presented as the per-
centage of the total energy incident upon the slab
absorbed in a specified region. The results are
compared with an empirical formula,
The Oracle Monte Carlo code was used to calcu-
late the primary gamma-ray heating in a stab shield
similar to that being used in the GE-BSF experi-
ment. |t was assumed that the slab thicknesses
were the same as those in the experiment and that
they were infinite in the other two directions. Most
of the assumptions made in the calculation caused
the results to be too high, possibly as much as a
factor of 1.5. This is corroborated by GE calcu-
lations of the heating which were based on an
analysis of the thermocouple measurements and
which were a factor of 2 lower than the results of
this Monte Carlo calculation,
A Monte Carlo code is being developed for the
IBM-704 machine to calculate the angular and
energy distributions, at a point detector, of gamma
rays emitted from a monoenergetic, point isotropic,
or point monodirectional source embedded in an
infinite homogeneous isotropic medium, The code
is now in the ‘‘debugging’’ stage.
Neutron dose-rate distributions beyond water
slabs 1, 3, 4, and 6 mfp thick were calculated for
plane monodirectional, monoenergetic sources
incident on the slabs at angles of 0, 30, 60, and
75deg. The source energies considered were
0.55, 1.2, 2, 4, 6, and 8 Mev. Dose-rate buildup
factors calculated for the various sources are pre-
sented, as well as the dose rates at the rear of the
slabs resulting from neutrons multiply scattered
within the slabs,
4.2. Lid Tank Shielding Facility
The final measurements taken in the L TSF ex-
periment designed by GE-ANP for the study of the
production of secondary gamma rays in configura-
tions containing advanced shielding materials are
presented. |n most of these last configurations,
all of which were tested in oil, the effectiveness
of various thickness of stainless steel with and
without boral was investigated, One configuration
that consisted only of berylium and lithium hydride
in oil was also tested,
A study of the production of secondary gamma
rays in lead was made with lead thicknesses that
varied from 1 to 9 in. The lead was followed by
either an oil medium or a borated-water medium in
which gamma-ray dose-rate measurements were
made. From these tests it appears that the first
3 in. of lead attenvated most of the primary gamma
rays from the LTSF source plate; further, the total
dose rutes at fixed distances from the source were
not affected when the lead thickness was increased
beyond 3 in, The measurements in the borated
water were a factor of 3 lower than the dose rates
in the oii in the region close to the lead and were
a factor of 13 lower approximately 120 cm beyond
the lead.
A corrected curve of thermal-neutron flux meas-
urements in oil at the LTSF is presented. It is
16% higher than the curve presented previously.
Shields consisting of randomly distributed ab-
sorbing chunks in a relatively transparent matrix:
must be from a few per cent to several hundred per
cent greater in mass than homogeneous shields
which give the same amount of attenuation, This
is the result of radiation ‘‘channeling’’ in the
spaces between the absorbing chunks. A method
for calculating the transmission of radiation through
heterogeneous shields has been developed, and a
typical calculation for boral has been performed.
The computed results are compared with experi-
mental results.
4.3. Bulk Shielding Facility
The planned series of measurements for the GE-
BSF study of the production of heat in radiation
shields was completed, but the results are of
questionable value since it has been discovered
that all of the heating samples leaked and oil
entered the air region surrounding the samples.
The series, which consists of configurations of
beryllium and lithium hydride separated by a
gamma-ray shielding section (iron, lead, or Mallory
1000), is being repeated with new samples.
4.4. Tower Shielding Focility
The experiment performed at the Tower Shielding
Facility in cooperation with Convair, Fort Worth,
to obtain information complementary to that obtained
from the Nuclear Test Airplane (NTA) program has
been completed. During the NTA program of ex-
periments, gamma-ray and fast-neutron dose rates
and thermal-neutron fluxes were measured both
inside and outside the airframe containing the
reactor while in flight and on the ground. Measure-
ments were also made on the ground in the absence
of the airplane structure. This last set of measure-
ments was duplicated in the TSF experiments, and,
in addition, measurements were made as a function
of altitude in the absence of the airplane structure.
With these additional measurements the influence
of the air, the ground, and the aircraft structure
on the various measurements can be determined.
The TSF experiment also included angular mappings
of the radiation around the various reactor shield
configurations, near the ground and at altitude,
to obtain data which will yield more accurate source
terms than were previously available. Some gamma-
ray and neutron energy spectra were also determined.
Predictions of the gamma-ray and fast-neutron
dose rates at large distances from the Tower
Shielding Reactor |l (TSR-Il) have been made for
two operating conditions. For the first case the
reactor was assumed to be bare and to be operating
at a 5-Mw power at an altitude of 200 ft, a condition
which would result in the highest dose rates that
could be achieved with the reactor, The gamma-ray
dose-rate calculations for the bare reactor were
based on measurements taken at large distances
from the TSR-|, while the fast-neutron dose-rate
calculations were based both on the TSR-| data
and on other measurements made at large distances
from the Aircraft Shield Test Reactor (ASTR). For
the second case the reactor was assumed to be
encased in a “‘beam’’ shield which would allow a
highly collimated beam of radiation to be emitted
from the reactor. This calculation, which was
based on measurements made at large distances
from the TSR-l in a simulated beam shield, is con-
sidered to be more representative of a typical
operation. The results for both cases are plotted
as a function of distance from the reactor. As part
of this investigation, a calculation was made of
the uncollided neutron flux 4200 ft from the TSR-I
to obtain a fast-neutron buildup factor for the case
Fad
in which an air-filled collimator extending through
the reactor shield is pointed at the detector,
4.5, Tower Shielding Reactor Il
The latest design of the TSR-Il, with its asso-
ciated controls and 5-Mw water cooling system, and
several studies supporting the design are pre-
sented. The critical mass has been set at 8.1 kg
with 1,6% excess reactivity. Control will be
achieved by moving six umbrella-shaped grids of
Inconel-clad cadmium in the internal water re-
flector, A description of the first shield is also
presented,
CONTENTS
SUMMARY ...ttt ettt e et et ee e e e e e e e es o2 s ee ettt ee s e et e
PART 1. METALLURGY
LTe FABRICATION ..ottt et e et ee et seee e e e es e ses e eee oo,
Columbium INVeSH GAHONS ..cvee ettt ettt ee e e et e e s e s s ee s et sese e
Effect of Heat Treatment on Mechanical Properties w.oo.uooooioooeeeeeeeee oo
EXTPUSION STUAIS ettt et e oo et e e e s e s ne e o
PUrification EXPErimMeNts ....ooiuiuieiiiiiiieceeeeeeeee e ee et e e e e e e e oot
SPECIal Alloy Preparations ...t e eeee et s et e eeseese s e s s e e reseseeseanes
Effects of Oxygen and Nitrogen Contamination on Corrosion by Lithium.....ccocvueeeuemrervernnn,
Yttrium and Yttrium Hydride Investigation S ... iieeciieoe oo eeeee e e e v s es s eses s see s ereras e e
Effect of Metal Purity on Hydriding .cooovvvoee oot s se e
Dissociation Pressure STUdies ...t ettt ettt er e eee e aeeeesaeas
Deformation Mechanisms of YHIIUM wo.ociiiiccc ettt et es et seet e e reas
Electron-Beam Melting of Yttrium and Yttrium-Magnesiom Alloy......ocoocoieeieeieeeeeeee s
Expansion of Ytrium Preparation ProCess ..o et e e ee e eseeeeve e e e e,
1.2, CORROSION L.ttt ee et et e et ese s ees eeeseasesetessasasen s ssnsessesessseasas
Lithium PuUFHiCation ..ot et ne st ee ettt s s essaeeeeemessssemeesraenas
Columbium Exposed 10 Lithium ..ottt e et e s e e s e s e sres e s s sene e
Arc-Cast Columbium Tubing Tested in Static Lithium .......cccoeiviiiioecieece e
Effect of Welding Procedures on Corrosion ca.. ittt et eva e tee et e
Comparison of Methods for Determining the Nitrogen Content of Columbium .........o.ocovvvvuerieernneee.
Molybdenum and Columbium Tested in Lithium in Seesaw-Furnace Apparatus .cccoceeeveereerveenennee.
Berylium Exposed 10 Lithium .o et eeee e eee s et e e eae e et areaeesnaeas
Refractory-Metal-Base Brazing Alloys Exposed to Lithium .....occooiiiiiiiiiieiieeeee e,
Determination of the Solution Rate of Metals in Lithium ....o...occcooiiiiiiieciceeee e
1.3, WELDING AND BRAZING ..ot ettt ire st e sre e ba b ans v e sae st eatabssassbasssbssesnsaaensarens
Development of Brazing Alloys for Lithium Service........cocooiiiioiiiiei e,
1.4.
1.5.
Welding Studies of Columbium
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
and Molybdenum ..o
..................................................................................................................
Development of Test Equipment for High-Temperature Investigations ...........cccccocoovrieviccivieciiecenaa.
Multiaxial Creep Studies..........
Creep Analysis ................
Rupture Analysis................
Strain-Fatigue Studies..............
Temperature Dependence ..
Frequency of Dynamic Loa
Design Factors ....ccoeueneee.
..................................................................................................................
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dS ............................................................................................................
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VOO NN O WWW W
xiii
1.6.
1.7.
2.1
2.2.
2.3.
3.1
3.2,
xiv
Densification of Beryllium Oxide ..ottt
Oxidation Resistance of Boron-Containing Beryllium Oxide Bodies ...c.ccocimiiiiiciiciiiiiiiiiininnne,
NONDESTRUCTIVE TESTING oottt et s seere s s e a et e e sarene san e snb bbb b ns
Remote XeRay VieWing ....ccooiiiiiiiiiiriniis ettt e s st st b ees s aaa b e n e e ae b e s abesinness
DUPLEX TUBING e bbb s e bbb e b s
Metal [dentification METEr .. ...cocuueiiiiiiiete et eeeetes bttt e ssees s aans e eeses s besbra s e s bt ae e s e rbaras s sanean treneaeares
METALLOGRAPHY Lottt es e et s ans sha s ek bbb e e s s s s e a st st e
Results of Metallographic Examination of Small Semicircular Fused-Salt Fuel-to-NaK
Heat Exchanger Operated at High Temperatures ..o
PART 2. CHEMISTRY AND RADIATION DAMAGE
MATERIALS CHEMIS TRY ittt e et st st ere e e ea e e se bbb b s b ibe s e e eas s
Preparation of Charge Material for Reduction to YHIUM .cccoooiiiiiiiiieiie e
Conversion of Y0, 10 YF 4o
Preparation of MgF , ..o
Preparation of the LiF-MgF,-YF, Mixture ..o
Phase Equilibria in the System LiF-YF ..o s
Extraction of Lithium Metal Impurities with Molten Salts ..o
ANALY TICAL CHEMISTRY .ottt ettt sttt re et sbe st s srs et e sasasess e s e e e nseasnesmsnbessssnsesias
Determination of Oxygen in Fluoride Salts ... s
Determination of Yttrium and Magnesium in LiF-Mng-YF3 ................................................................
RADIATION DAMAGE ...ttt ettt e e te s te st e s e e e s e st e e eabe st e e eaeeneesebeesesenbnansaara s
ETR Irradiation of Moderator Materials for Use at High Temperatures ...,
Creep and Stress Rupture Tests Under lrradiation ..o
Radiation Effects in Electronic Components ... it et te s e e meanse st aeesessssas
Wide-Range Multipurpose Cryostat.. ..ottt e
Grown-Junction Silicon Diode lrradiation ........cooieiieiieieee et s e
Low-Temperature Indium-Germanium AllOy .......ccooiiviiiiiiic e
PART 3. ENGINEERING
COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING ..ccoiiieieeciitceiee et snen s s
Irradiation Test of Oil-Lubricated Pump Rotary Element ..o,
Test of NaK Pump with Fulton-Sylphon Seal.......cccooiiiiiiircr s
Cavitation Tests of Centrifugal PUmps ..ot
Thermal Stability Tests of Metal Shells. ...
HEAT TRANSFER STUDIES w..oooovoc e SO USSR
Studies of the Effect of Thermal-Stress Cycling on Structural Materials ...
Liquid-Metal Heat Transfer Experiment ..o,
Heat Transfer with Vortes Flow .ot tetaee s e e st sen e senneaeans
3.3.
3.4.
3.5.
4.1.
4.2.
INSTRUMENTATION AND CONTROLS 94
Data ACQUISITION Sy STEM ..ottt e 94
Liquid-Metal-Level TranSducers .......cooovuomoooeeeoeoeeoeeoeee e 94
Pressure Transmitter TestS ..ot ee oo e 94
ThermoCOUPIE TeSES ........oiiiuieriirn ettt ettt ee et ee et eoee e e oo e oo eseee e 95
Thermocouple Development STUdIES ............cooemiivviieeoeeeeeeseeeeeeree oo oo oo 95
Behavior of Thermocouples in the Temperature Range 300 t6 1100°C weeveveveoeoooeeoeeooo 95
Oxidation and Cold Work STUdies .....oiuueieeeeceeeeeeeese e eeeeee e 96
Calibration SHUAIES ..ot ettt ee e et eeee e 9%
Oracle Program for Thermocouple-Data Handling ..o eeeeeoeevoeooeeoeoeeoeeeoeeoeeoeeeeeeeee 96
APPLIED MECHANICS. . ..ottt es e e 98
Basic Problems in EIastiity oiiuiiriiiiocececeeceeee e et 28
NUMEFICAl ANGIY SIS ©oiviuitiiteicecececet ettt 99
ADVANCED POWER PLANT DESIGN .. ..ot 101
Vortex Reactor Experiments.. ...cooocoviiuiiiiiiieec oo e e et 101
Survey of Design Problems of Auxiliary Power Units for Satellites ..oooomommoooooeoeoooo, 110
Cycle Performance Considerations ..o oo oo 110
PLANNE PROGIAM ..ottt e s et e e e e et 113
PART 4. SHIELDING
SHIELDING THEORY ..ottt st ee e aes s ee s e e e s ae sttt s s eee oo eeoe e 119
Analysis of Neutron Physics Division Experimental Study of Gamma Rays
Produced by Neutron Interaction i AQr ......o.ooeeeoeee oo e 119
Spectra of Gamma Rays Incident on the Outside of the Collimator .....cocooveeveeeeereveseereereorrorans 121
Spectrum After Attenuation and Buildup in the Water Collimator.o.ovimmmeeoooooeooooo, 122